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The real star in the recipe is the olive bread, which gets spread in the roasting pan and toasted in the chicken pan juices.
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This quicker onion soup is made with vegetable broth, and flavored with thyme and brandy.
cooking.nytimes.com
This version of the Tuxedo cocktail first appeared in a cocktail book in 1900 Essentially a traditional martini that is lent sweet and herbal notes by small amounts of maraschino liqueur and absinthe, it is a gentler, more delicate version of its austere cousin Jarred Roth, beverage director of the Bar Room at the Beekman in New York, prefers the Brooklyn-made Greenhook gin and the soft French Dolin vermouth.
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Crispy bacon with sauteed onions, brown sugar, sherry vinegar, seasonings, is finished off with aged balsamic vinegar and olive oil.
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Grilling concentrates the sweet flavor of fresh baby carrots. (Bagged "baby" carrots will never taste the same.)
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Recipe for Mozzarella and Arugula Salad with Croutons and Black Olives, as seen in the March 2009 issue of 'O, The Oprah Magazine.'
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Nick Fauchald adds fabulous smoky flavors to the Catalan sauce romesco by swapping in smoked almonds for the usual plain kind and adding a touch of pimentón de la Vera (powdered, smoked Spanish red peppers).
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Smother chicken breasts in buttermilk ranch dressing, followed by Parmesan-oregano bread crumbs, for a quick and easy weeknight meal.
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Rosemary and sage flavor this pork tenderloin. A fresh blackberry-Cabernet sauce provides the perfect accompaniment.
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Get Cinnamon Bun Turkeys Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
You may think it unfathomable to change up a classic babka recipe, but maybe there’s something to be said about playing with a classic Ann Amernick, the author of “The Art of the Dessert,” adds apricot jam to her chocolate babka for a little acidity Poundcake crumbs lighten the filling a bit, soaking up the jam
cooking.nytimes.com
Polpette are Italian meatballs; polpettine are meatballs, too, but more diminutive It follows, then, that polpettone is Italian for meatloaf (or a substantial meatball large enough to share) But polpettone is much more interesting than the somewhat bland everyday meatloaf known in the United States